“We’re not interested in Sprint. We don’t need them,” Mr. Mead said at the CTIA Wireless Conference, according to Reuters.

AT&T announced over the weekend that it struck a deal with Deutsche Telkom to buy T-Mobile USA. The purchase still needs to pass standard regulatory approval, which A&T expects could take up to 12 months. Once completed, the US$39 billion deal will make AT&T the single largest mobile service provider in the U.S.

“At closing, AT&T will immediately gain cell sites equivalent to what would have taken on average five years to build without the transaction, and double that in some markets,” AT&T said in a statement.

Mr. Mead also said Verizon has no plans to oppose the AT&T deal.

Sprint had apparently been interested in purchasing T-Mobile USA before AT&T swept in and struck its own deal. With T-Mobile off the table, speculation arose around the idea that Verizon might buy the carrier to help keep its lead over rival AT&T.